I would say that right now you have a failure of our system, which allows resources that we don't need anymore to flow to disposal options. As I said before, you're looking at rates in Michigan and New York that are below $10 a tonne, we understand. When you add in the processing costs that go into sorting materials so that they can be rerouted back into the economy, you can't make the economic case. So I say it's a systems failure because clearly there's value in those resources that we're sending to disposal, but the economy is not taking that into account.
The dynamics need to be changed there. That's about how we put the right economic tool in place so that we're capturing those resources and re-injecting them back into the economy. The problem right now is that the disposal rate is so low that it's tipping everything that way. That has been the case for obviously some time. Over the last two to three decades, at least in Ontario, our disposal rate has remained consistent at 75% of our waste going to disposal.